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Breastfeeding
Counters Harm
of Smoking in Pregnancy
Excerpt
By
Alison McCook,
Reuters Health
New research suggests that the
benefits of breastfeeding on infants' mental development might
offset some of the harm posed by smoking during pregnancy.
Research has suggested that smoking
during pregnancy can have a negative effect on a child's mental
development. But in the new study, 9 year olds whose mothers smoked
during pregnancy and breast-fed them for more than three weeks
scored similarly on tests of reading, math and spelling as breast-fed
children of mothers who did not smoke during pregnancy.
However, among bottle-fed children,
those whose mothers smoked during pregnancy scored worse than
those born to non-smokers, researchers report in the current issue
of the Journal of Epidemiology & Community Health.
"The harms of cigarette smoking
seem to be offset by the benefits of breastfeeding," study author
Dr. Laura Batstra of the University of Groningen in The Netherlands
told Reuters Health.
These findings do not suggest,
however, that it is okay for women to smoke during pregnancy as
long as they give their babies breast milk, Batstra said.
"Smoking during pregnancy is very
harmful to the unborn baby and should always (try) to be avoided,"
she said. "But apart from helping ... future mothers to stop smoking,
they should be encouraged to breastfeed."
Smoking during pregnancy is linked
to a number of ill effects, including a higher risk of miscarriage
and low birth weight. Babies whose mothers smoke while pregnant
are also at greater risk of sudden infant death syndrome, or SIDS.
According to Batstra, it is unclear
how breastfeeding might help negate the effects of smoking during
pregnancy, but suggested that babies may benefit from breast milk's
high concentration of a type of fatty acid that has been shown
to aid brain development.
Hormones in breast milk may also
help babies overcome the negative effects of smoking, she noted.
The benefits of breastfeeding may
also extend beyond what's good about breast milk itself, Batstra
said, and breast-fed babies might also enjoy psychological benefits
from breastfeeding.
Alternatively, women who breast-feed
may differ in important qualities from women who don't -- perhaps
in IQ or parenting skills -- and these differences might explain
why their children did better on the tests, she said.
For the study, Batstra and her
colleagues looked at data on 3,162 newborns born at their hospital
in the 1970s. Their mothers were asked about breastfeeding and
whether they smoked during pregnancy at the time of discharge
from the hospital.
When 570 of the children were about
9 years old, they took standardized tests of arithmetic, reading
and spelling skills. At that time, the mothers were asked again
about how long they breast-fed.
SOURCE: Journal of Epidemiology
& Community Health 2003;57:403-404.
Reference
Source 89
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